- Apr 5, 2018
- 6
- 0
- 1
I recently got a machine with a Core i7-7820X CPU, Asus Prime X299-Deluxe motherboard and GeForce GTX 1080 Ti video card. I'm using Windows 10 1709 16299.309.
There were numerous performance issues such as stuttering in video games, stuttering when dragging windows in Windows Explorer (single monitor, not dual monitor), and typing in any app. The multiplier would vary from 12-40 depending on load.
Disabling just SpeedStep in the BIOS did not fix the issues, and the multiplier would still vary. Disabling both SpeedStep and Speed Shift seems to fix all the issues, and the multiplier seems to stay in the 40-41 range. Performance is extremely good now: apps open very quickly and app interfaces and gameplay are very smooth. The difference was dramatic.
CPU core temps seem fine during normal use, all around 31. Haven't stress tested yet.
I'm curious how these options are supposed to work, and if it's a bad idea to disable them. I don't want those issues to return, they were really annoying. I could live with decreased CPU life if it's only moderate.
Advice appreciated, thanks!
There were numerous performance issues such as stuttering in video games, stuttering when dragging windows in Windows Explorer (single monitor, not dual monitor), and typing in any app. The multiplier would vary from 12-40 depending on load.
Disabling just SpeedStep in the BIOS did not fix the issues, and the multiplier would still vary. Disabling both SpeedStep and Speed Shift seems to fix all the issues, and the multiplier seems to stay in the 40-41 range. Performance is extremely good now: apps open very quickly and app interfaces and gameplay are very smooth. The difference was dramatic.
CPU core temps seem fine during normal use, all around 31. Haven't stress tested yet.
I'm curious how these options are supposed to work, and if it's a bad idea to disable them. I don't want those issues to return, they were really annoying. I could live with decreased CPU life if it's only moderate.
Advice appreciated, thanks!